The Chicago Manual of Style (CMoS) 17th Edition provides guidelines for two different documentation systems, the notes and bibliography style and the author-date style. The notes and bibliography style is favoured in humanities disciplines such as literature, history and the arts, while the author-date bibliography style is more commonly used by those in the sciences and social sciences.
As its name suggests, the notes and bibliography style cites sources in numbered footnotes or endnotes and is preferably accompanied by a corresponding bibliography. The author-date style utilises parenthetical in-text citations and a reference list instead.
A superscript number is used at the end of the sentence whereupon the source is referenced through quotations, summaries or paraphrasing.
Corresponding numbered footnotes are added at the end of the page in the footer section. Endnotes are added at the end of each chapter or paper, preceding the bibliography.
Should a bibliography be excluded, full bibliographic notes should be used in the first mention in the footnotes but in the second mention, it can be shortened to contain the author’s last name, the shortened title (if the title is longer than four words), and the page number/range (if relevant). Full notes should be repeated in every new chapter.
Should a bibliography be included, shortened bibliographic notes may be used. Consecutive references to the same source may also use shortened bibliographic notes; they may also be listed as “Ibid” followed by a comma and page number or range.
Example
In-text |
Stone states that “one should content oneself with painting a succession of ‘great men’ making ‘great discoveries’ leaving out the wider context and all the false leads.”1 |
Full Note (First mention if bibliography is omitted) |
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Shortened Note (First mention if bibliography is included, second mention if bibliography is omitted) |
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Subsequent Note (Consecutive mentions, immediately preceding source) |
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Bibliography |
Stone, William F., and Paul E. Schaffner. The Psychology of Politics. Springer Science & Business Media, 2012. |
Bibliography
Though it is not mandatory to include a bibliography, it is typically preferred. The bibliography should be on a new page at the end of the research paper. The title - Bibliography, should be centered and the list should be double spaced. Each source entry should have a hanging indent. Source entries are arranged in alphabetical order by the first term in each entry.
Full Notes
Shortened Notes
Bibliography
Author’s last name, first name. Title. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication.
*For citation of a specific chapter or a specific translated/edited version, please see Conditions to Note
eBooks
At the end of the notes or bibliography, add the format accessed such as Kindle, PDF…etc. If accessed online, include the URL/DOI.
Full Notes
Shortened Notes
Bibliography
Author's last name, first name. "Title of article: Subtitle of article." Journal title volume, issue (Month Year of publication): page number/range.
eJournals
At the end of the notes or bibliography, include the URL/DOI.
Full Notes
Shortened Notes
Bibliography
Author's last name, first name. "Title of article." Newspaper/Magazine title, Month Day of publication, Year of publication.
eNewspapers/eMagazines
At the end of the notes or bibliography, include the URL or DOI.
The citation format may vary depending on the nature of the source and which element is considered most significant to the paper.
Full Notes (Work)
Full Notes (Episode)
Shortened Notes (Work)
Shortened Notes (Episode)
Bibliography (Work)
Writer/Director’s last name, first name. dir/writer. Title of work. Directed/Performed by first name last name. Original Release Year; City: Studio/Distributor, Video release year. Medium.
Bibliography (Episode)
Writer/Director’s last name, first name. dir/writer. Title of work. Season number, episode number, “Title of episode.” Aired Month Day, Year, on Network Name. Medium.
If accessed online, replace the network name and medium with the URL.
Full Notes
Shortened Notes
Bibliography
Author's last name, first name. “Title of article.” Website name. Publishing organisation. Published/Modified/Accessed Month Day of publication, Year of publication. URL.
Unpublished interviews are usually included in notes only.
Full Notes
Shortened Notes
Bibliography
Interviewee’s last name, first name. Title of Broadcast. By interviewer’s first name last name. Publisher/Studio, date.
This applies to public content available on social media platforms only. Should the content be private, the citation format for personal communication should be used instead. All formatting of the original source including spelling, punctuation…etc. should be kept and listed within quotation marks. Should the content exceed 160 characters, end it with an ellipsis where it makes sense.
Full Notes
Bibliography
Last name, first name (Social media handle). “Post text”. Social media platform, Medium, Publication date, Time stamp. URL.
Personal communications are usually included in notes only. Contact information such as email addresses are omitted unless necessary with permission obtained.
Full Notes
Generative content from AI should be acknowledged if referenced and the format for personal communication is recommended.
Full Notes
Conditions |
Examples |
Multiple Authors |
Full Notes Example
Shortened Notes Example
Bibliography Example Gaiman, Neil, and Terry Pratchett. Good Omens. London, England: Gollancz, 2014.
*For four or more authors, use “et al.” full notes and shortened notes. For more than ten authors, list up to seven authors followed by “et al.” in the bibliography.
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Corporate Author |
Some organisations create sources with no individual author credited. In these cases, cite the name of the organisation instead. Do omit articles - the/a/an - at the start of the organisation names. |
No Author |
If the source does not specify an author, begin with the source title instead. |
Translator/Editor |
Full Notes Example
*Use “trans.” and “ed.” for the translator and editor respectively.
Shortened Notes Example
Bibliography Example Saint-Exupéry, Antoine de. The Little Prince. Translated by Irene Testot-Ferry. Ware, Hertfordshire: Wordsworth, 2018.
*Use “Translated by” and “Edited by” for the translator and editor respectively.
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Emphasis on a chapter |
Full Notes Example
Shortened Notes Example
Bibliography Example Hu, Shu, and Wei-Jun Jean Yeung, eds. “Falling Short.” In Family and Population Changes in Singapore: A Unique Case in the Global Family Change, 96-111. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2018.
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Indirect Sources |
While discouraged, if the original source is unavailable, use “quoted in” when citing indirect source.
Full Notes Example
Shortened Notes Example
Bibliography Example Rogers, John. “Theoretical Issues in the Study of Crime.” Criminology Review 30, no. 2 (2006): 21. Quoted in Sara Townsend and Helen White. Youth Justice. New York: Random House, 2008, 56. |
*List is not exhaustive, for more formats and conditions, refer to the CMoS or visit Purdue’s guide.
The author-date style utilises parenthetical in-text citations and a reference list.
In-text Citation
The author-date style uses parenthetical citations containing the author’s last name, publication year, and page number/range to refer to sources whereupon quotations, summaries, or paraphrasing are found in the researcher’s text. When citing narrative in-text citations, the publication year should be put in brackets after the author’s name and the page number/range should be put in brackets where relevant in the paper.
Examples
Parenthetical In-text Citation |
Racial identity is not indicative of low-income groups’ “sensibilities, habits and decisions” (Teo 2018, 329). |
Narrative In-text Citation |
Teo (2018, 329) asserts that racial identity is “not a strong predictor of sensibilities, habits, and decisions among people who are low-income” and current literature on race must be reexamined and reevaluated to an acute degree withstanding discomfort and disruption to truly comprehend racial structures (330). |
2 Authors |
(Lee and Tan 2015, 23) |
3 or more Authors |
(Lee et al. 2015, 23) |
Corporate Author |
(Ministry of Health 2017, 23) |
No Page Number |
Cite a section title, a chapter number, or simply omit. (Wong 2017, chap. 6) |
No Date |
Use “n.d.” for no date. (Harper n.d.) |
Reference List
For the author-date style, a reference list is mandatory. The formatting of source citation is similar to the notes and bibliography style but the difference lies in the heading “References” instead of “Bibliography” and the placement of the date element; it comes after the author’s name in author-date style.
Author-date style
Author's last name, first name. Year of publication. Title. Place of publication: Publisher.
Notes and bibliography style
Author’s last name, first name. Title. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication.
Refer to CMoS or Purdue’s Guide to format headings, subheadings, position, spacings…etc. There are also sample papers available.